T. Schneider, E. Stoll
Physical Review B
Thermal decomposition of triphenyl boron vapor at 800°C produced boron-carbon thin films of composition C16-18B. The room-temperature resistivity of this material was 1.8 × 10-4 Ω· cm, considerably lower than pyrolytic carbons produced at similar temperatures. This resistivity remained unchanged as the temperature was lowered to 5 K, indicating fine-grain, metallic-like conductivity. Material composition was determined using Auger electron spectroscopy. X-ray and electron diffraction studies show that the films had a layered structure similar to turbostatic graphite and ESCA experiments indicate that the boron is bonded to carbon and is not present as a second phase. © 1994.
T. Schneider, E. Stoll
Physical Review B
A.B. McLean, R.H. Williams
Journal of Physics C: Solid State Physics
Andreas C. Cangellaris, Karen M. Coperich, et al.
EMC 2001
Ming L. Yu
Physical Review B